Hannah checkers - how much do you trust/like them?

Rick Mathew

Valuable Member
View Badges
Joined
Mar 21, 2016
Messages
1,472
Reaction score
4,736
Location
North Central Florida
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I have had very good results with the Hanna Checkers. I use the Alk, Phosphorous and Calcium. On occasion I have used the Nitrite checker. I found the key is good lab practices and I can get repeatable and accurate results when compared to outside testing services

Just a note on the Hanna Calcium Checker. I have had very good success with this checker and have been using it for over 2 years. I made three changes that brought my Gage repeatability and reproducibility to less than 10% of the target range (100...350-450)

1) Purchased .3mL syringe...very accurate...You can find these from multiple suppliers

2) Use Hanna Deionized water (HI70436) and not my RODI water which has a small amount of calcium in it and is variable from batch to batch.

With the dilution ratio being so high and the water sample amount being so small these two changes took my R&R (repeatability and reproducibility) from between 30-40% (not good! almost random results) to less than 10% a very acceptable range for this test. My results have been validated by external testing sources so I feel confident in the measurement.

3) After the test is complete I rinse the vial and cap with the Hanna deionized water then fill the vial to the top with this water and store it this way until next use. Then on the next use I empty the vial do a quick rinse with the deionized water and proceed with the test.

IMO with good laboratory practices these checkers are great tools and do not rely on color change interpretation to make the measurement which in itself is a variable
 

joro

That Guy
View Badges
Joined
May 27, 2016
Messages
598
Reaction score
335
Location
Virginia
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I have had very good results with the Hanna Checkers. I use the Alk, Phosphorous and Calcium. On occasion I have used the Nitrite checker. I found the key is good lab practices and I can get repeatable and accurate results when compared to outside testing services

Just a note on the Hanna Calcium Checker. I have had very good success with this checker and have been using it for over 2 years. I made three changes that brought my Gage repeatability and reproducibility to less than 10% of the target range (100...350-450)

1) Purchased .3mL syringe...very accurate...You can find these from multiple suppliers

2) Use Hanna Deionized water (HI70436) and not my RODI water which has a small amount of calcium in it and is variable from batch to batch.

With the dilution ratio being so high and the water sample amount being so small these two changes took my R&R (repeatability and reproducibility) from between 30-40% (not good! almost random results) to less than 10% a very acceptable range for this test. My results have been validated by external testing sources so I feel confident in the measurement.

3) After the test is complete I rinse the vial and cap with the Hanna deionized water then fill the vial to the top with this water and store it this way until next use. Then on the next use I empty the vial do a quick rinse with the deionized water and proceed with the test.

IMO with good laboratory practices these checkers are great tools and do not rely on color change interpretation to make the measurement which in itself is a variable

This is some good info and I guess I never really considered that my RODI water could have some calcium in it or skew the results in a meaningful way. One other tip for the Ca checker is I never felt confident with the sample being exact each time given the small amount. Hanna released (and i think it's bundled in with the new Ca checkers) a graduated pipette that gets the exact same amount each time which is nice. It's a little sporty to buy separately but I have seen more consistency in the tests since I started using it.
 

mcarroll

10K Club member
View Badges
Joined
Jan 8, 2012
Messages
13,802
Reaction score
7,977
Location
Virginia
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
This is some good info and I guess I never really considered that my RODI water could have some calcium in it or skew the results in a meaningful way.

Hanna has to say this because they sell to everyone – people with functional RODI filters who maintain their units AND people who never change their filters and have "RODI water". If you have 0 TDS RODI water it should be fine....I never used distilled and (once I practiced) had no problem matching my test results to Salifert.

Distilled water is less of a question mark in terms of quality variability. Since almost nobody makes their own distilled that means it's less likely to be screwed up – it's all "professionally made".
 

statru

Active Member
View Badges
Joined
Aug 9, 2016
Messages
116
Reaction score
43
Location
Shermans Dale, PA
Rating - 0%
0   0   0

erk

Valuable Member
View Badges
Joined
Mar 19, 2014
Messages
1,382
Reaction score
2,049
Location
DFW
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I use both Alk and Calcium Hanna checkers. The Alk checker is great. Super quick and dummy proof. But I had some issues with the Calcium checker when I first got it. The crappy pipette they pack with the kit just doesn't give consistent results. I was getting readings all over the place. I eventually bought a $75 lab grade 100uL pipette and that solved my issues. Very consistent results. Don't have to fiddle with how fast or slow you release the plunger. I checked the readings against my Red Sea kits.
 

Larry L

Valuable Member
View Badges
Joined
Nov 4, 2014
Messages
1,348
Reaction score
1,426
Location
x
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
After adding the reagent and shaking for a bit hold the buttom down and it will start a 3:00 countdown. Plenty of time to finish shaking and get it into place.

That's not the correct procedure for the phosphorus checker (the ULR one, anyway). The three-minute timer isn't supposed to start until after you have shaken the sample for two minutes and put it back in the checker. As long as you open and prep the reagent packet before doing anything else, you'll have plenty of time to add the reagent and shake after C2 is displayed.
 

Holy_makerel

Well-Known Member
View Badges
Joined
Sep 12, 2016
Messages
720
Reaction score
646
Location
Richland
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
That's not the correct procedure for the phosphorus checker (the ULR one, anyway). The three-minute timer isn't supposed to start until after you have shaken the sample for two minutes and put it back in the checker. As long as you open and prep the reagent packet before doing anything else, you'll have plenty of time to add the reagent and shake after C2 is displayed.

I'd be curious to see side by side results attempting to use the whole 3 minutes given and starting the countdown a min early

I think the results would be very similar. As long as all the reagent is disolved the timing is pretty irrelevant.

Thats my theory anyway.

Happy reefing!
 
Last edited:

5280Reefer

Lover of all things reef
View Badges
Joined
Mar 3, 2017
Messages
526
Reaction score
408
Location
Owasso
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I use the Hanna Alk, ULR Phos and the Cal checker and love them all!! The Cal checker comes with a new syringe that does exactly .1ml every time never fails, have done about 15 test Salifert CA and Hanna they always are in the same ball park about 10ppm. I also do the triangle thing with the packets and prepare them before i even start the checker. Imo Hanna is an amazing tool that we have in this hobby.
 

SashimiTurtle

Turtle
View Badges
Joined
Feb 24, 2017
Messages
9,241
Reaction score
35,051
Location
South Carolina
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I have the HI722 Alk dKH, HI758 Calcium and the HI713 Low Range Phosphate checkers. I'll tell you to forget the Calcium, the process for testing is way too complicated and I always get results that are crazy off. We're talking 100+ ppm off. It's a horrible test procedure. The phosphate checker isn't accurate enough to test phosphates at the levels we try and keep out tanks. I think the ULR phosphorus checker is better at detecting these levels. So, both of those are junk... wasted money. The Alk checker is priceless tho. I wouldn't give it up for a frag of Walt Disney... ok maybe I would, then buy another Hanna Alk checker. The procedure is simple, and I get dead on accurate results every single time.
 

zachxlutz

120 Gallons of FUN
View Badges
Joined
Oct 22, 2016
Messages
793
Reaction score
720
Location
Lawrenceville, Georgia
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I have the HI722 Alk dKH, HI758 Calcium and the HI713 Low Range Phosphate checkers. I'll tell you to forget the Calcium, the process for testing is way too complicated and I always get results that are crazy off. We're talking 100+ ppm off. It's a horrible test procedure. The phosphate checker isn't accurate enough to test phosphates at the levels we try and keep out tanks. I think the ULR phosphorus checker is better at detecting these levels. So, both of those are junk... wasted money. The Alk checker is priceless tho. I wouldn't give it up for a frag of Walt Disney... ok maybe I would, then buy another Hanna Alk checker. The procedure is simple, and I get dead on accurate results every single time.

What do you find the issue to be with the ULR Phosphorus checker? I use it frequently, as I'm battling a low nutrient situation, and the results are repeatable and testing process is dead simple. It takes 3 minutes!
 

madweazl

2500 Club Member
View Badges
Joined
Sep 19, 2016
Messages
4,110
Reaction score
5,094
Location
Virginia
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
What do you find the issue to be with the ULR Phosphorus checker? I use it frequently, as I'm battling a low nutrient situation, and the results are repeatable and testing process is dead simple. It takes 3 minutes!
My issue is that it has read 3x the levels of my Triton results the two times I've sent samples and the results vary wildly sample to sample. Likely a combination of me and the test. I used to target .03 on the Hanna but got 0 on my Triton results. .150 on the Hanna was .049 from Triton so now I target .1-.150 on the Hanna and call it good. Like others, I find the Alkalinity checker to be simple to use and using a syringe and filling the cuvette with 10ml of water has been very close to the Salifert results. The line on the cuvette isn't very close to 10ml from my syringes. Arent cuvettes suppose to be parallelograms...
 

SashimiTurtle

Turtle
View Badges
Joined
Feb 24, 2017
Messages
9,241
Reaction score
35,051
Location
South Carolina
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I do not have the ULR Phosphorus... I have the Low Range Phosphate. It can't read anything below a certain point where algae completely covers your aquarium. Watch this and go to 8:30 for all the results.
 

mcarroll

10K Club member
View Badges
Joined
Jan 8, 2012
Messages
13,802
Reaction score
7,977
Location
Virginia
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
The phosphate checker isn't accurate enough to test phosphates at the levels we try and keep out tanks. I think the ULR phosphorus checker is better at detecting these levels.

Hm....the ppb checker is overkill. If you're keeping a tank in that range, you better REALLY know what you're doing as "regular folk" get into trouble with it all the time.

My issue is that it has read 3x the levels of my Triton results the two times I've sent samples and the results vary wildly sample to sample. Likely a combination of me and the test. I used to target .03 on the Hanna but got 0 on my Triton results.

I would not spend any time or worry on comparing results from two different reputable test kits....both are probably correct, plus it's not the point. Comparing your own readings from the same test kit is the idea. IMO, it's completely reasonable to expect to need a conversion factor when comparing results between majorly different test methods.

It can't read anything below a certain point where algae completely covers your aquarium.

Do you have a thread open on that issue that you can link here or PM to me? I would stop pounding on your tank's PO4 and try a different course – there are lots of algae that LOVE low nutrient environments and you don't want ANY of them blooming in your tank. PM me even if there's no thread link and I'll try to help! :)
 

Larry L

Valuable Member
View Badges
Joined
Nov 4, 2014
Messages
1,348
Reaction score
1,426
Location
x
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Hm....the ppb checker is overkill. If you're keeping a tank in that range, you better REALLY know what you're doing as "regular folk" get into trouble with it all the time.

I don't think it's overkill. I am not trying to keep an ultra-low nutrient system, but I use the URL checker for the reasons spelled out in that video - it's more accurate in the range I am trying to keep my tank at (0.03 to 0.05-ish).
 

mcarroll

10K Club member
View Badges
Joined
Jan 8, 2012
Messages
13,802
Reaction score
7,977
Location
Virginia
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
but I use the URL checker for the reasons spelled out in that video

I took a look, tell me if I'm mistaken...

At about 4:11 he says (paraphrasing) that it's a tiny difference and not big enough to make a difference to most reefers and not worth breaking out a calculator to use the lower-range phosphorous meter.

At around 6:00 he says that if you're questing for ultra low nutrients (< 0.03 ppm according to them) the phosphorus tester "might be worth it".

At about 9:50, after their testing, he reiterates pretty much the same.

Matching your goals with their results seems to indicate that either would be fine for you and the phosphate meter would even be slightly less bother.

You would simply use it with the accuracy level in mind when you approach zero, like with any test kit. No problem! :)
 

Larry L

Valuable Member
View Badges
Joined
Nov 4, 2014
Messages
1,348
Reaction score
1,426
Location
x
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Matching your goals with their results seems to indicate that either would be fine for you
Agree.

and the phosphate meter would even be slightly less bother.
Since I use Apex Fusion to log test results it's no extra bother, because it automatically does the phosphorus to phosphate conversion math.
 

poorish idol

Community Member
View Badges
Joined
Mar 10, 2014
Messages
79
Reaction score
21
Location
brooklyn, ny
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I have always used salifert...i thnk they are easy enough...i was gona mess with ha na but when I learned how complicated they are as well..i didn't bother..why mess with something. that ain't broken
 

madweazl

2500 Club Member
View Badges
Joined
Sep 19, 2016
Messages
4,110
Reaction score
5,094
Location
Virginia
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I would not spend any time or worry on comparing results from two different reputable test kits....both are probably correct, plus it's not the point. Comparing your own readings from the same test kit is the idea. IMO, it's completely reasonable to expect to need a conversion factor when comparing results between majorly different test methods.

Is it reasonable to expect such a delta between tests? Regardless of how the results are derived, one would think they should be close to one another. I would agree that consistent (test to test with whatever is used day to day) is likely more important that absolute accuracy but these results varied rather wildly. Doesn't instill much confidence as a consumer.
 

mcarroll

10K Club member
View Badges
Joined
Jan 8, 2012
Messages
13,802
Reaction score
7,977
Location
Virginia
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Is it reasonable to expect such a delta between tests? Regardless of how the results are derived, one would think they should be close to one another. I would agree that consistent (test to test with whatever is used day to day) is likely more important that absolute accuracy but these results varied rather wildly. Doesn't instill much confidence as a consumer.

I thought @Randy Holmes-Farley had commented on this issue before but I can't find it now.
 

Freshwater filter only or is it? Have you ever used an HOB filter on a saltwater tank?

  • I currently use a HOB filter on my reef tank.

    Votes: 10 29.4%
  • I don’t currently use a HOB filter on my reef tank, but I have in the past.

    Votes: 4 11.8%
  • I have used a HOB on fish only or quarantine tanks, but not on the display tank.

    Votes: 8 23.5%
  • I have never used a HOB on a saltwater tank.

    Votes: 11 32.4%
  • Other.

    Votes: 1 2.9%
Back
Top